0:32 she says 日本人のご主人たち(は)ご遠慮せずに日本語を打っても問題ないでございます, so rather than "without greetings" it should be something like "without holding back." (for the (は) part I'm pretty sure she meant は but it came out sounding like を--probably just the debut nerves) As soon as she started speaking Chinese I was like, "Welp, hope Shuriken of Spades comes through for me," and you did, so thank you for both the Chinese and Thai translations!!
Well, ofc. While company is burning, and trying to accelerate in merch production, new tallents barely getting support from company... Ofc the bar will be high, because no one thought, that someone would join it after so many controversies and problems. The only thing we can hope, is that they have outside work, so they don't loose too much from revenue cuts of already small gaining.
It's really amazing that she was able to speak 4 languages, but translating all of them takes some skill! Anyways, I think Klara will be my new oshi from this group
okay....SHE CAN SAY CHINESE SO FLUENTLY WHCIH IS SO GOOD LIKE SHE IS THE BEST I HAVE SEEN AND JAPENESE IS JUST FACINATING AND EVEN THAI HUUHHHH?!?!?!?! HOWWW?!?!?!
Is speaking four languages that uncommon?? In my family we speak Portuguese, Spanish and English (mostly because we live in a place that speaks Spanish and English). Portuguese is my first language bc we come from Brazil. Me and my dad started learning French for fun, and he knows German too (I don’t know German though)
Brasileiro consegue entender uns 50% de espanhol sem nunca ter aprendido, inglês tem muita gente aprendendo na escola pro enem, francês e alemão tem bastante semelhanças com português e inglês também. Agora chinês você não vai entender absolutamente nada se você nunca aprendeu, japonês é um pouco melhor que eles falam uns japanglish de vez em quando, mas os dois têm semelhanças entre si. Tailandês é uma língua indo-ariana, que já é completamente diferente de tudo que falei antes. Então sim, pra essas línguas que ela fala é bem impressionante. Sem contar que o inglês e japonês dela não tem nada de sotaque estrangeiro, e isso é raríssimo
In the Anglosphere? Unquestionably. Your average person whose parents are also native English speakers is simply monolingual, since they already speak the lingua franca that most of the rest of the world has to pick up as a second language. Immigrants or children of immigrants will usually speak two, although three is possible if they have a strong community to speak both with growing up (most of my friends growing up and were fluent in English as well as their mother tongue). To go beyond that is pretty rare and requires some special interest in language or a specific environment where a language not spoken in the home is highly prevalent in the community; this is why I specified the Anglosphere, since places like India and Indonesia have a high degree of linguistic diversity so this is much more common. In my experience, unless people have a particular interest and facility for language and/or a community to use it in consistently, whatever foreign language they learn in school is lost pretty quickly after graduation to the point where I wouldn't count it as a viable second language. I think it's particularly impressive that each of the four languages that Klara speaks are from entirely different language families. Learning German as an English speaker or Spanish as a Portuguese speaker is not too bad, since there's a lot of shared vocabulary, grammar, and phonetics to a degree where a Portuguese speaker and a Spanish speaker can speak their native languages to each other and work out a very rough understanding. But going from English and Thai to Japanese and Chinese you bring almost nothing along with you and have to completely rethink how language is spoken (although knowing Thai is a major advantage for Chinese, since she'd be attuned to hearing and using tones). It's also not a given that being brought up multilingual means you will be good at learning additional languages--I've known native trilinguals who struggled mightily to learn a fourth language in school and monolinguals who took to the task effortlessly. Also, just to be sure: my point about learning languages in the same family was not at all meant to be a knock on your own accomplishments--"easier" is very much a relative term, and becoming proficient in any language takes years of concerted effort. I'm not monolingual, but I'm also definitely not at an advanced level of fluency in either of my second languages, so I really admire people who are able to move smoothly between different linguistic communities! It really is a wonderful skill to have which allows you to connect with all kinds of different people and perspectives, and even my more modest language abilities have really enriched my life to the point where I can't imagine being monolingual.
For someone who lives in a country that pretty much only speaks English? Yeah. Especially with four such different languages, since Portuguese and Spanish are relatively similar
@@EphemeralPseudonym I suppose there’s also the fact that English is an absurdly easy language for almost anyone to learn mostly bc there aren’t èéêëė æàáãâ ìíî ūùúüû ōœôöóõò you get my point
0:32 she says 日本人のご主人たち(は)ご遠慮せずに日本語を打っても問題ないでございます, so rather than "without greetings" it should be something like "without holding back."
(for the (は) part I'm pretty sure she meant は but it came out sounding like を--probably just the debut nerves)
As soon as she started speaking Chinese I was like, "Welp, hope Shuriken of Spades comes through for me," and you did, so thank you for both the Chinese and Thai translations!!
Thanks for the correction!
The bar is set so high nowadays. Good luck senpais
Well, ofc. While company is burning, and trying to accelerate in merch production, new tallents barely getting support from company... Ofc the bar will be high, because no one thought, that someone would join it after so many controversies and problems. The only thing we can hope, is that they have outside work, so they don't loose too much from revenue cuts of already small gaining.
her little accent when she stutter while speaking Chinese is so cute😭😭
1:57 She really served
She has an accent in Chinese but she’s still so much better than me omg
The Thai accent is so cute😭
1:49
oh god hes cooked
absolutely flabbergasted 😂😂
woahh EN got another multilingual!! hoping they could do another chaotic multilingual collab!
Ooh yeah the goose goose duck collab!!
the high spec maid anime trope is real!
this is dream come true 🥹
Her thai is soooo good, so far I've seen only native thai say "ตายแล้ว", but she said it so naturally, could be fluent level
Her tones are on point
Vanta is so cooked lol
I love her sweet & gentle voice, it suits well for a maid
1:42 the perfect response to whatever the heck just happened there LMAO
omg she is an quadrilingual
😂I read that as quadrilateral at first
@@mme725 "I'm quadrilateral."
Insane that some people speak 4 fucking languages. Being bilingual is already a mess for my brain
at that point just call her a ployglot.
You mean a Polyglot
Her voice is so nice and soothing... perfect for a maid
It's really amazing that she was able to speak 4 languages, but translating all of them takes some skill! Anyways, I think Klara will be my new oshi from this group
Vanta when hearing voice : pog face
SERVE AND ATE OMG…
omgg her thai accent is so good 🥺🥺
Vanta neurons activated . lmao i was imagining if he was holding himself to not grab the mic and say "WOULD." like in the meme
HOLY SHITTTT SHES SO CUTTTEEEEEEE
1:25 omg your accent is so goodddd I even thought that my sister spoke that time
She is a perfect maid
Klara's voice is so beautiful 😍
KLAARRAA 😍 SHES SO CUTE I LOVE HER VOICE
Vanta being smitten with Klara lives in my head rent free
The way her Thai is dialect too 🥺💗
Thai so well
Actual high spec maid.
A glaringly rare oddity
THANK YOU FOR CLIPPING THIS BAHAHA their reactions were priceless
using thai for ordering spicy food. based
HER DESIGN IS SOOO CUTEEE ❤❤❤ AND LOVE YOUU FOR TRANSLATING THE OTHER LANGUAGE!!!THANK YIU SO MUCH!
She's so freaking cool. What did she do to become so cracked? What kind of reality-altering godmaking PEDs.
whatever it is I need one too
Her thai accent is so good!! Approved!❤
Although she has a pretty heavy accent in Chinese, her tones and word usage are all amazing! I would say she’s right below fluent level ❤
The perfect maid
okay....SHE CAN SAY CHINESE SO FLUENTLY WHCIH IS SO GOOD LIKE SHE IS THE BEST I HAVE SEEN AND JAPENESE IS JUST FACINATING AND EVEN THAI HUUHHHH?!?!?!?! HOWWW?!?!?!
ATEEEEE
Her voice and she speak Thai remind me someone😿
Seems like I going to add another "Clara" to my vtuber playlist.. After some blue hair Clara from the other company.
For a sec I thought you were referring to the female streamer caught cheating live who blamed Clara for installing hacks in her computer
2 seasons and a movie please
Vanta lmao 😂
SHE IS SEA???? SEA REPRESENT?????
Oh shit exact same height, I wish I had those proportions
SERVED AND ATE!!!
me hitting the air when she cab speak thai
(iykyk)
WAWAWA YESS
wow
Damn
Oh, I mistake reading it as Kiara.Thats what you get for not wearing glasses
Who!
えあたしもかんじわdめ💀
I just realized she is shorter than me and I'm 11
Is speaking four languages that uncommon?? In my family we speak Portuguese, Spanish and English (mostly because we live in a place that speaks Spanish and English). Portuguese is my first language bc we come from Brazil. Me and my dad started learning French for fun, and he knows German too (I don’t know German though)
Brasileiro consegue entender uns 50% de espanhol sem nunca ter aprendido, inglês tem muita gente aprendendo na escola pro enem, francês e alemão tem bastante semelhanças com português e inglês também. Agora chinês você não vai entender absolutamente nada se você nunca aprendeu, japonês é um pouco melhor que eles falam uns japanglish de vez em quando, mas os dois têm semelhanças entre si. Tailandês é uma língua indo-ariana, que já é completamente diferente de tudo que falei antes.
Então sim, pra essas línguas que ela fala é bem impressionante.
Sem contar que o inglês e japonês dela não tem nada de sotaque estrangeiro, e isso é raríssimo
In the Anglosphere? Unquestionably. Your average person whose parents are also native English speakers is simply monolingual, since they already speak the lingua franca that most of the rest of the world has to pick up as a second language. Immigrants or children of immigrants will usually speak two, although three is possible if they have a strong community to speak both with growing up (most of my friends growing up and were fluent in English as well as their mother tongue). To go beyond that is pretty rare and requires some special interest in language or a specific environment where a language not spoken in the home is highly prevalent in the community; this is why I specified the Anglosphere, since places like India and Indonesia have a high degree of linguistic diversity so this is much more common. In my experience, unless people have a particular interest and facility for language and/or a community to use it in consistently, whatever foreign language they learn in school is lost pretty quickly after graduation to the point where I wouldn't count it as a viable second language.
I think it's particularly impressive that each of the four languages that Klara speaks are from entirely different language families. Learning German as an English speaker or Spanish as a Portuguese speaker is not too bad, since there's a lot of shared vocabulary, grammar, and phonetics to a degree where a Portuguese speaker and a Spanish speaker can speak their native languages to each other and work out a very rough understanding. But going from English and Thai to Japanese and Chinese you bring almost nothing along with you and have to completely rethink how language is spoken (although knowing Thai is a major advantage for Chinese, since she'd be attuned to hearing and using tones). It's also not a given that being brought up multilingual means you will be good at learning additional languages--I've known native trilinguals who struggled mightily to learn a fourth language in school and monolinguals who took to the task effortlessly.
Also, just to be sure: my point about learning languages in the same family was not at all meant to be a knock on your own accomplishments--"easier" is very much a relative term, and becoming proficient in any language takes years of concerted effort. I'm not monolingual, but I'm also definitely not at an advanced level of fluency in either of my second languages, so I really admire people who are able to move smoothly between different linguistic communities! It really is a wonderful skill to have which allows you to connect with all kinds of different people and perspectives, and even my more modest language abilities have really enriched my life to the point where I can't imagine being monolingual.
For someone who lives in a country that pretty much only speaks English? Yeah. Especially with four such different languages, since Portuguese and Spanish are relatively similar
@@gumilhopipoca4041 bom ponto, eu não pensei nessa parte das línguas serem parecidas ou não. eu to muito mais impressionada agora do q eu tava antes
@@EphemeralPseudonym I suppose there’s also the fact that English is an absurdly easy language for almost anyone to learn mostly bc there aren’t èéêëė æàáãâ ìíî ūùúüû ōœôöóõò you get my point
Her voice and she speak Thai remind me someone😿